You're always welcome in the Catholic Church. However, if you've received a civil divorce and are married to someone else without having your first marriage annulled, you cannot receive the Sacraments because the Church still views your first marriage as valid and you, therefore, as living in a state of serious (mortal) sin.
A divorced man/ woman cannot get married in the catholic church again. The sacrament of matrimony can be received only once in the Roman Catholic Church.
your marriage outside of the Catholic church is invalid due to improper form. your 1st marriage in the church nullified it. If you are divorced and are a practicing Catholic, you may receive communion as long as you remain faithful to your 1st spouse. This would be the situation for any divorced Catholic. You are not free to marry without nullifying the first marriage.
Yes. If the Catholic man's ex spouse was living he could not get married in the church, unless the marriage was decreed invalid and annulled. However, if the ex spouse dies, death ends the marriage ( until death do us part) and he is free to remarry in the Catholic Church
If there are no impediments (eg: previously married and divorced without an annulment), all you need to do is talk to the pastor and arrange for the marriage to be blessed by the Church. Now, if there is some impediment, you will also need to talk with the pastor to regularize the situation.
The Catholic Church does not acknowledge divorce, so even though you had a civil divorce and re-married, this was not recognized by the Church. If your husband from your first marriage passed away, you can now have a Catholic wedding and marry your 2nd husband.
Yes, no problem at all, as long as the partner is free to marry in the catholic Church. He would need to check with priest or deacon about the partner's freedom to marry.
The person must first seek an annulment of the original marriage before any type of catholic wedding may take place.
The head of the Roman Catholic Church is called the Pope.
Jesus continues to lead the Catholic Church through his vicar on earth, Pope Benedict XVI.
the episcopal, because in the catholic church what is the practice of the first apostle is still practice until now.
The depends on the religion of the couple celebrating the marriage ceremony. To contract marriage validly in the eyes of the Catholic Church, a Catholic is required to marry in a Catholic ceremony, even if they are marrying a non-Catholic. If neither party is Catholic, the Catholic Church would consider the civilly-wed couple to be validly married, but not sacramentally married.
Roman Catholic Chuch